讨论:乳房重建后的选择性修复:来自乳房切除术重建结果联盟的结果。

Austin Y. Ha, T. Myckatyn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

www.PRSJournal.com 1291在这篇文章中,Nelson等人报告了通过七种不同的方式获得满意的乳房切除术后乳房重建所需的翻修次数和总手术次数:直接植入、两期组织扩张/植入、带蒂腹直肌肌皮瓣、游离腹直肌肌皮瓣、腹壁下深穿支皮瓣、腹壁下浅动脉皮瓣、背阔肌皮瓣联合植入这代表了一个重要的补充乳房重建文献,并祝贺作者的工作。这篇文章的一个重要发现是并发症导致翻修和全手术的增加;没有出现并发症的女性中有40.2%接受了翻修手术,而有并发症的女性中有67.1%接受了翻修手术,平均需要2.2次手术来实现无并发症的稳定重建,而有并发症的平均需要2.6次手术。这些发现在很大程度上与早期的研究一致。2-5作者将选择性修复定义为在麻醉下在手术室进行的任何手术,在标准重建算法之外-指数程序和乳头-乳晕复合体重建。脂肪移植、皮瓣重塑或重新定位、疤痕修复和/或狗耳切除是三种最常见的选择性手术。几个有趣的统计学意义上的临床和人口统计学差异被观察到在那些接受治疗的患者和没有接受治疗的患者之间。总的来说,自体重建的患者比假体重建的患者进行了更多的翻修,这与之前发表的数据相反在并发症组中,预防性乳房切除术的妇女比治疗性乳房切除术的妇女选择修复的比例更大。这可能是由于接受预防性乳房切除手术的妇女通常更年轻,也许更有动力达到更好的审美效果。虽然众所周知放射治疗会导致并发症的发生率增加,但它与较低的修复率相关。正如作者所讨论的那样,这一发现可能与患者和外科医生都有关,因为病情更严重,因此需要放射治疗的患者可能更倾向于推迟额外的选择性手术,特别是当外科医生认为在辐射场进行手术的风险增加是不可取的。最后,非白人和非黑人患者接受修复手术的可能性几乎是一半,尽管先前的研究表明种族和选择重建方式(假体和自体)之间没有关系这个群体的样本量相对较小,使得颗粒亚群分析变得困难;然而,这是一个值得进一步研究的领域。在讨论选择性手术的频率时,重要的是要记住这些决定的内在个人性质。与术后血肿清除或动脉或静脉功能不全的皮瓣探查不同,脂肪移植治疗上极体积缺陷或狗耳切除在医学上是不必要的。具有相同主诉的两名患者通常对问题的严重性和进行矫正手术的阈值有截然不同的看法。患者报告的关于选择(或放弃)修订动机的数据将是有价值的。外科医生如何治疗病人
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Discussion: Elective Revisions after Breast Reconstruction: Results from the Mastectomy Reconstruction Outcomes Consortium.
www.PRSJournal.com 1291 I this article, Nelson et al. report the number of revision and total procedures required to achieve satisfactory postmastectomy breast reconstruction by seven different modalities: direct-to-implant, two-stage tissue expander/implant, pedicled transversus rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap, free transversus rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap, deep inferior epigastric perforator flap, superficial inferior epigastric artery flap, and combination latissimus dorsi flap and implant.1 This represents an important addition to the breast reconstruction literature, and the authors are to be congratulated for their work. A key finding of this article is that complications lead to an increase in both revision and total procedures; 40.2 percent of women who did not experience complications underwent revision procedures versus 67.1 percent of those who did, and an average of 2.2 procedures were required to achieve a stable reconstruction without complications versus 2.6 procedures with complications. These findings are largely in agreement with earlier studies.2–5 The authors defined elective revisions as any operations performed in the operating room under anesthesia, outside of the standard reconstructive algorithm—the index procedure and nipple-areola complex reconstruction. Fat grafting, recontouring or repositioning of flap, and scar revision and/or dog-ear excision were the three most common elective procedures. Several interesting statistically significant clinical and demographic differences were observed between those patients who pursued revisions and those who did not. On the whole, patients who had autologous reconstruction underwent more revisions than those who had prosthetic reconstruction, contrary to previously published data.3 In the complication group, a greater proportion of women who had prophylactic mastectomies opted for revisions than the women who had therapeutic mastectomies. This may be explained by the fact that women who receive prophylactic mastectomies are generally younger6 and perhaps more motivated to achieve a superior aesthetic outcome. Although radiation therapy is well known to lead to an increased incidence of complications,7–10 it was associated with lower rates of revisions. As the authors discuss, this finding is likely both patientand surgeon-related, as patients with more advanced disease and therefore requiring radiation therapy may be more inclined to defer additional elective surgery, especially if the surgeon considers the increased risks of operating in an irradiated field inadvisable. Lastly, patients who were neither white nor black were almost half as likely to undergo revision procedures, although prior research has shown no relationship between ethnicity and choice of reconstruction modality (prosthetic versus autologous).11 The relatively small sample size of this population makes granular subgroup analysis difficult; however, it is an area that deserves further research. When discussing the frequency of elective procedures, it is important to remember the inherently personal nature of these decisions. Unlike postoperative hematoma evacuation or exploration of a flap with arterial or venous insufficiency, fat grafting for superior pole volume deficit or dog-ear excisions are medically unnecessary. Two patients with the same presenting complaint often have vastly different perceptions of the magnitude of the issue and thresholds for pursuing corrective surgery. Patient-reported data on the motivation for choosing (or forgoing) revisions would be valuable. How a surgeon manages the patient
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